Pass Christiancity, Harrison county, southern Mississippi, U.S., just west-southwest of Gulfport, on Mississippi Sound (an embayment of the Gulf of Mexico). It is named for the nearby deepwater channel known as Christian’s Pass, which runs through the sound along the Gulf Coast, supposedly navigated in 1699 by Christian L’Adnier, a member of the crew of the French explorer Pierre Le Moyne d’Iberville. Originally settled by the French and Spanish, it became a trading centre with the opening of the Mississippi Territory. A U.S. garrison was stationed there in 1811, and the misnamed Battle of Pass Christian, fought (1814) during the War of 1812 nearby in St. Louis Bay, was the last naval engagement (a British victory) to take place in continental U.S. waters against a foreign foe.

The first yacht club on the Gulf Coast was organized at Pass Christian in 1849, and the town became a popular resort for plantation owners. Later the railroads brought an influx of winter visitors from the North, including Presidents Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson, and Harry S. Truman. The city was devastated by Hurricane Camille in 1969 but subsequently recovered. It was again destroyed in 2005 by Hurricane Katrina, which displaced all its residents.

A sand beach 26 miles (42 km) long extends eastward from Pass Christian through Gulfport to Biloxi. A Mardi Gras parade is held annually. The town remains a year-round resort and has some manufacturing (concrete products) and fishing interests. Inc. 1838. Pop. (19902000) 56,557579; (20002010) 64,579613.